Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Update dependency postcss to 7.0.36 [SECURITY] #52

Merged
merged 1 commit into from
Mar 24, 2022

Conversation

renovate[bot]
Copy link

@renovate renovate bot commented Feb 9, 2022

WhiteSource Renovate

This PR contains the following updates:

Package Change
postcss 7.0.35 -> 7.0.36

GitHub Vulnerability Alerts

CVE-2021-23368

The npm package postcss from 7.0.0 and before versions 7.0.36 and 8.2.10 is vulnerable to Regular Expression Denial of Service (ReDoS) during source map parsing.


Configuration

📅 Schedule: "" in timezone Europe/Oslo.

🚦 Automerge: Disabled by config. Please merge this manually once you are satisfied.

Rebasing: Whenever PR becomes conflicted, or you tick the rebase/retry checkbox.

🔕 Ignore: Close this PR and you won't be reminded about this update again.


  • If you want to rebase/retry this PR, click this checkbox.

This PR has been generated by WhiteSource Renovate. View repository job log here.

@renovate renovate bot added the security label Feb 9, 2022
@coveralls
Copy link

Pull Request Test Coverage Report for Build 1817055552

  • 0 of 0 changed or added relevant lines in 0 files are covered.
  • No unchanged relevant lines lost coverage.
  • Overall coverage remained the same at 5.882%

Totals Coverage Status
Change from base Build 1637369024: 0.0%
Covered Lines: 4
Relevant Lines: 164

💛 - Coveralls

@runely runely merged commit 1be35e3 into main Mar 24, 2022
@runely runely deleted the renovate/npm-postcss-vulnerability branch March 24, 2022 11:39
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

3 participants